Intensive
Care Medicine (2022) Published: 20
April 2022
Purpose
We assessed outcomes after 1 year of lower versus higher
oxygenation targets in intensive care unit (ICU) patients with severe
hypoxaemia.
Methods
Pre-planned analyses evaluating 1-year mortality and
health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) outcomes in the previously published
Handling Oxygenation Targets in the ICU trial which randomised 2928 adults with
acute hypoxaemia to targets of arterial oxygen of 8 kPa or 12 kPa
throughout the ICU stay up to 90 days. One-year all-cause mortality was assessed
in the intention-to-treat population. HRQoL was assessed using EuroQol 5
dimensions 5 levels (EQ-5D-5L) questionnaire and EQ visual analogue scale score
(EQ-VAS), and analyses were conducted in both survivors only and the
intention-to-treat population with assignment of the worst scores to deceased
patients.
Results
We obtained 1-year vital status for 2887/2928 (98.6%), and
HRQoL for 2600/2928 (88.8%) of the trial population. One year after
randomisation, 707/1442 patients (49%) in the lower oxygenation group vs. 704/1445
(48.7%) in the higher oxygenation group had died (adjusted risk ratio 1.00; 95%
confidence interval 0.93–1.08, p = 0.92). In total, 1189/1476 (80.4%)
1-year survivors participated in HRQoL interviews: median EQ-VAS scores were 65
(interquartile range 50–80) in the lower oxygenation group versus 67 (50–80) in
the higher oxygenation group (p = 0.98). None of the five EQ-5D-5L dimensions
differed between groups.
Conclusion
Among adult ICU patients with severe hypoxaemia, a lower
oxygenation target (8 kPa) did not improve survival or HRQoL at 1 year as
compared to a higher oxygenation target (12 kPa).
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